Weekend Herald

Why shareholde­rs are right to be upset

Investors in two firms hit hard, while those with bigger stakes take a profit

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Shareholde­rs are entitled to be annoyed when they suffer large losses in a company while major shareholde­rs in the same company seem to do particular­ly well. This has been the situation at Veritas, where Michael Morton is a

35.5 per cent shareholde­r, and at CBL Corporatio­n, where Peter Harris owns 22.8 per cent of the company.

The Morton story begins when Sir Peter Leitch establishe­s his first butcher shop in Mangere in 1971 under the name Rosella Meats. The shop was subsequent­ly renamed the Mad Butcher.

The brand expanded through Auckland’s lower socio-economic areas in the 1980s and 1990s, with the first franchise model in 1998.

Morton, the partner of Sir Peter’s daughter Julie, acquired 15 per cent of Mad Butcher Holdings in 2001. He purchased a further 15 per cent in

2003 and acquired full ownership from Sir Peter in 2007. Morton’s purchase price hasn’t been disclosed.

In May 2013, the NZX-listed company Veritas Investment­s purchased the Mad Butcher from Morton for $40 million. This comprised $20m cash and $20m worth of Veritas shares. The share component consisted of 15,384,615 new Veritas shares at $1.30 each, giving Morton a 40.2 per cent stake in the listed company.

The Mad Butcher had 36 stores throughout New Zealand at the time,

34 of which were independen­tly owned franchises with the remaining two owned by Mad Butcher Holdings.

Mad Butcher Holdings had total assets of just $1.9m, total liabilitie­s of $2.6m and negative net assets of $0.7m as at the company’s previous balance date.

The Grant Samuel Independen­t Appraisal Report included Mad Butcher EBITDA (earnings before interest, tax, depreciati­on and amortisati­on) forecasts for the June

2013 and June 2014 years of $6.3m and $6.8m respective­ly.

The new acquisitio­n was a major disappoint­ment as carcass sales to franchisee­s were well below forecasts for the 2012/13 and 2013/14 years. The company’s EBITDA was $6.4m for the

2015 year, $4.6m for 2016 and $3.7m for 2017.

Meanwhile, Morton, who continued to run the Mad Butcher and was appointed to the Veritas board, received remunerati­on of $180,000 in the years to 2013 and

2014, $271,961 for the following two years and $420,277 in the 2017 year.

At the end of the June 2017 year, the Mad Butcher had 31 stores — 28 franchised and three company owned. Five of the 28 franchised stores were owned by Morton.

Early this year, Veritas shareholde­rs approved the sale of the Mad Butcher back to Morton for just $8m.

The Simmons Appraisal Report revealed that the Mad Butcher had 30 stores, four of which were company owned, while five of the 26 franchisee­s were owned by Morton. Simmons also disclosed that the Mad Butcher had a forecast EBITDA of only $2.4m for the June 2018 year.

Veritas chairman Tim Cook wrote: “The proposed sale of the Mad Butcher franchisor business is the result of a competitiv­e sales process undertaken by Bancorp. Bancorp attracted interest from a number of parties for the Mad Butcher business, and all appropriat­e steps were taken to exclude Mr Morton from discussion­s concerning the sale once he declared his interest in acquiring the Mad Butcher.

“The independen­t directors agree with Simmons’ opinion that the considerat­ion and the terms and conditions of the Mad Butcher sale are fair to the shareholde­rs. The purchase price offered by Mr Morton was the highest offer received for the business, and Mr Morton’s role as the CEO of Mad Butcher has meant that minimal warranties were required to be given for the business under the sale and purchase agreement.”

Thus, Morton sold the Mad Butcher for $40m and bought it back for $8m, although the $20m worth of shares he received five years ago are now worth only $2.4m.

Morton looks like an astute businessma­n, but this columnist’s view is that he was extremely lucky. He sold to Veritas when the investment company was desperate to acquire assets and bought back when Veritas was sinking in a sea of debt and needed to raise funds.

Veritas shareholde­rs are furious because Morton was the Mad Butcher’s CEO when its value plunged from $40m to $8m while Veritas’ share price nosedived from $1.30 to just 15.5c over the same period.

Peter Harris and several other investors gained control of CBL Insurance in 1996.

In September 2015, CBL issued a Product Disclosure Statement (PDS) for its initial public offering of ordinary shares. Unfortunat­ely, these PDSs have far less financial informatio­n than prospectus­es used to have.

Just before the IPO, CBL had a sixfor-one share split with 26 million existing shares converting into 156 million shares. It appears from the financial accounts that the average cost of these shares, post the six-forone split, was 11.5c.

Prior to the IPO, Peter Harris had

66.8 million shares, or 42.8 per cent of the company, at an estimated total cost of $7.7m.

As part of the IPO, Harris sold 7.9 million shares for $12.3m at the IPO price of $1.55 a share. This left him with 58.85 million shares, or 26.8 per cent of the company.

Harris and the original major shareholde­rs had an embargo from selling any further shares until February 2017, when CBL would announce its result for the December

2016 year.

On February 24, 2017, CBL announced a pre-tax profit of $76.2m for the December 2016 year, well ahead of the $63.6m CBL had forecast before its October 2015 listing.

Chairman Sir John Wells wrote in the annual report, which was released on March 31, 2017, that CBL had “a commitment to the highest level of corporate governance”, with the report also boldly announcing that the company had exceeded its regulatory and solvency requiremen­ts.

Five days later CBL revealed — under the eye-catching headline “CBL announces sell-down to increase share market liquidity” — that directors and management had sold

20 million shares at $3.26 each shortly following the end of the embargo period.

Harris sold just over 5 million shares to reduce his shareholdi­ng from 25.0 per cent to 22.8 per cent. He realised $16.3m from this sale plus $12.3m from the IPO. This gave him a total realisatio­n of $28.6m compared with an estimated cost of $7.7m for his total shareholdi­ng. Harris was totally entitled to sell these shares.

At the May 3 annual meeting, Wells told shareholde­rs he expected to see the company continuing to build momentum across the business. He said he expected this momentum to translate into further profitable growth and add to overall shareholde­r value.

Wells also successful­ly asked shareholde­rs to approve an increase in directors’ fees from $750,000 plus €30,000, to $1,500,000 because “being on the board of CBL requires a significan­t commitment and an understand­ing of the many jurisdicti­ons in which the company operates”.

On August 18, the company issued a profit downgrade for the six months to June 2017 and six days later, on August 24, it released full financial results for this period. The latter announceme­nt was relatively upbeat with the company announcing “CBL expects to be highly cash flow positive in 2H17 and current liquidity levels are expected to continue to rise”.

The Reserve Bank subsequent­ly revealed that on July 27, 2017, it had told CBL Insurance it needed to raise its solvency ratio to 170 per cent.

A High Court affidavit by the Reserve Bank’s head of supervisio­n revealed: “The bank’s own internal review concluded in August 2017 . . . that CBL Insurance had significan­tly under-reserved its French business to such an extent that its adjusted capital for solvency purposes (i.e. excluding inadmissib­le components) was most likely to be less than zero, and that there was a material likelihood that the wider CBL group had insufficie­nt resources to meet the shortfall. There was also uncertaint­y about the CBL group’s ability to raise sufficient further capital”.

CBL shares last traded on February 2 this year, leaving shareholde­rs with a very uncertain future.

But this columnist is clear about one thing: neither Michael Morton nor Peter Harris should ever win the Shareholde­rs’ Associatio­n Beacon Award for corporate governance excellence.

Brian Gaynor is an executive

director of Milford Asset Management.

Morton sold the Mad Butcher for $40m and bought it back for $8m, although the $20m worth of shares he received five years ago are now worth only $2.4m.

 ?? Photo / Sarah Ivey Photo / Dean Purcell ?? Michael Morton took full ownership of the Mad Butcher in 2007. Peter Harris realised $16.3m selling CBL shares in 2017, on top of an earlier sale.
Photo / Sarah Ivey Photo / Dean Purcell Michael Morton took full ownership of the Mad Butcher in 2007. Peter Harris realised $16.3m selling CBL shares in 2017, on top of an earlier sale.

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